Joan Blondell
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Joan Blondell | |
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circa 1936
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Born | Rose Joan Blondell August 30, 1906 New York City, New York, U.S. |
Died | December 25, 1979 (aged 73) Santa Monica, California, U.S. |
Cause of death
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Leukemia |
Resting place
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Forest Lawn Memorial Park, Glendale |
Occupation | Actress |
Years active | 1927–1979 |
Spouse(s) |
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Children | Norman S. Powell (b. 1934) Ellen Powell (b. 1938) |
After winning a beauty pageant, Blondell embarked upon a film career. Establishing herself as a sexy wisecracking blonde, she was a pre-Code staple of Warner Brothers and appeared in more than 100 movies and television productions. She was most active in films during the 1930s, and during this time she co-starred with Glenda Farrell in nine films, in which the duo portrayed gold-diggers. Blondell continued acting for the rest of her life, often in small character roles or supporting television roles. She was nominated for an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for her work in The Blue Veil (1951).
Blondell was seen in featured roles in two films released shortly before her death from leukemia, Grease (1978) and the remake of The Champ (1979).
Contents
Early life
Blondell was born to a vaudeville family in New York City. Her father, known as Ed Blondell, was born in Indiana in 1866 to French parents, and was a vaudeville comedian and one of the original Katzenjammer Kids. Blondell's mother was Kathryn ("Katie") Cain, born April 13, 1884, in Brooklyn, of Irish American parents. Her younger sister, Gloria Blondell, also an actress,[2] was briefly married to film producer Albert R. "Cubby" Broccoli (the future producer of the James Bond film series). Blondell also had a brother, Ed Blondell, Jr., the namesake of her father. Her cradle was a property trunk as her parents moved from place to place and she made her first appearance on stage at the age of four months when she was carried on in a cradle as the daughter of Peggy Astaire in The Greatest Love.Joan had spent a year in Honolulu (1914-15) [3] and six years in Australia and seen much of the world by the time her family, who had been on tour, settled in Dallas, Texas when she was a teenager. Under the name Rosebud Blondell, she won the 1926 Miss Dallas pageant and placed fourth for Miss America in Atlantic City, New Jersey, in September of that same year. She attended what is now the University of North Texas, then a teacher's college, in Denton, where her mother was a local stage actress, and she worked as a fashion model, a circus hand, and a clerk in a New York store. Around 1927, she returned to New York, joined a stock company to become an actress, and performed on Broadway. In 1930, she starred with James Cagney in Penny Arcade.[4]
Career

Blondell in the trailer for the 1932 film Three on a Match
Blondell was paired with James Cagney in such films as Sinners' Holiday (1930) – the film version of Penny Arcade – and The Public Enemy (1931), and was one half of a gold-digging duo with Glenda Farrell in nine films. During the Great Depression, Blondell was one of the highest paid individuals in the United States. Her stirring rendition of "Remember My Forgotten Man" in the Busby Berkeley production of Gold Diggers of 1933, in which she co-starred with Dick Powell and Ruby Keeler, became an anthem for the frustrations of the unemployed and the government's failed economic policies. (Even though she was cast in many of the classic Warners musicals, she was not a singer, and in the Forgotten Man number, she mostly talked and acted her way through the song.) In 1937, she starred opposite Errol Flynn in The Perfect Specimen.
Blondell also guest starred in various television programs, including three episodes in 1963 as the character "Aunt Win" of the CBS sitcom The Real McCoys, starring Walter Brennan and Richard Crenna. She appeared in a 1964 episode "What's in the Box?" of The Twilight Zone. She guest starred in the episode "You're All Right, Ivy" of Jack Palance's circus drama, The Greatest Show on Earth, which aired on ABC in the 1963—1964 television season. Her co-stars in the segment were Joe E. Brown and Buster Keaton. In 1965, she was in the running to replace Vivian Vance as Lucille Ball's sidekick on the hit CBS television comedy series The Lucy Show. Unfortunately, after filming her second guest appearance as 'Joan Brenner' (Lucy's new friend from California), Blondell walked off the set right after the episode had completed filming when Ball humiliated her by harshly criticizing her performance in front of the studio audience and technicians.

With Cagney in Footlight Parade (1933)
In 1972, she had an ongoing supporting role in the NBC series Banyon as Peggy Revere, who operated a secretarial school in the same building as Banyon's detective agency. This was a 1930s period action drama starring Robert Forster in the titular role. Her students worked in Banyon's office, providing fresh faces for the show weekly. The series was replaced mid-season.
Blondell has a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for her contribution to Motion Pictures, at 6309 Hollywood Boulevard. In December 2007, the Museum of Modern Art in New York City mounted a retrospective of Blondell's films in connection with a new biography by film professor Matthew Kennedy and theatrical revival houses such as Film Forum in Manhattan have also projected many of her films recently.
Personal life

with John Wayne in Lady for a Night (1942)
On July 5, 1947, Blondell married her third husband, producer Mike Todd, whom she divorced in 1950. Her marriage to Todd was an emotional and financial disaster. She once accused him of holding her outside a hotel window by her ankles. He was also a heavy spender who lost hundreds of thousands of dollars gambling (high-stakes bridge was one of his weaknesses) and went through a controversial bankruptcy during their marriage. An often-repeated myth is that Mike Todd "dumped" Joan Blondell for Elizabeth Taylor—when, in fact, Blondell left Todd of her own accord years before he met Taylor.
Death
Blondell died of leukemia in Santa Monica, California, on Christmas Day 1979 at the age of 73 with her children and her sister at her bedside. She is interred in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California.She wrote a novel titled Center Door Fancy (New York: Delacorte Press, 1972), which was a thinly disguised autobiography with veiled references to June Allyson and Dick Powell.[citation needed]
Filmography
Features
This list of Blondell's feature-film appearance is believed to be complete.Short subjects
- The Heart Breaker (1930)
- Broadway's Like That (1930)
- The Devil's Parade (1930)
- An Intimate Dinner in Celebration of Warner Bros. Silver Jubilee (1930)
- How I Play Golf, by Bobby Jones; No. 10: Trouble Shots (1931)
- Just Around the Corner (1933)
- Hollywood Newsreel (1934)
- Meet the Stars#2: Baby Stars (1941)
- The Cincinnati Kid Plays According to Hoyle (1965)
References
- Obituary Variety, December 26, 1979.
- Gloria Blondell at the Internet Movie Database
- Punahou School Alumni Directory, 1841-1991. White Plains, NY: Harris Publishing Company, 1991.
- Joan Blondell at the Internet Broadway Database
Bibliography
- Matthew Kennedy, Joan Blondell: A Life Between Takes (University Press of Mississippi, 2007) ISBN 1-57806-961-0
Further reading
- Oderman, Stuart, Talking to the Piano Player 2. BearManor Media, 2009. ISBN #1-59393-320-7.
- Grabman, Sandra, Plain Beautiful: The Life of Peggy Ann Garner. BearManor Media, 2005. ISBN #1-59393-017-8.
External links
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Wikimedia Commons has media related to Joan Blondell. |
- Joan Blondell at the Internet Broadway Database
- Joan Blondell at the Internet Movie Database
- Joan Blondell at the TCM Movie Database
- Joan Blondell at AllMovie
- Photographs of Joan Blondell
- Joan Blondell Q&A with Biographer Matthew Kennedy
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Categories:
- 1906 births
- 1979 deaths
- 20th-century American actresses
- Actresses from Santa Monica, California
- Actresses from New York City
- American beauty pageant winners
- American female models
- American film actresses
- American people of French descent
- American people of Irish descent
- American stage actresses
- Burials at Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Glendale)
- Cancer deaths in California
- Deaths from leukemia
- Miss America 1920s delegates
- Vaudeville performers
- Warner Bros. contract players
- Ziegfeld girls
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